Re: Hi Nancy :-))
Bill Nelson wrote:
> Look at the problem from a smaller scale. Say we shoot a high
> velocity rifle bullet vertically here on Earth (assume no
> atmosphere). The bullet will slow down, the fall back to the Earth.
> Now, do the same thing on Eros. The bullet will never slow down
> enough to fall back to the asteroid. It will keep going away forever.
The Zetas wish to respond:
Does the expansion coming out of a Big Bang continue forever,
or does it turnabout and become a large Black Hole, to start the
process again? A discussion on these issues places man outside
of his environment, as to him he sees only expansion in the
Universe around him, so a turnabout is theoretical and thus
subject to haggling. We, the Zetas, have visited portions of the
Universe where a turnabout is in process, so can speak to these
issues with confidence. However, on these sci.astro debates,
haggling occurs in any case. To make the statement that
expansion goes on into infinity is to assume that such activity
occurs in a vacuum - a silly assumption. You have expansion
and contraction occurring in a school yard, when a toy rocket is
sent skyward and then slows and falls back to earth. Should one
of the boys declare that the rocket will proceed forever, based on
dissecting the trajectory so ONLY the escape is considered, he'd
be called a fool. But on sci.astro, this is allowed to be a serious
argument.
So what are the factors that influence a turnabout?
First, the rush of matter leaving a Big Bang is not homogeneous,
else formation of stars and planets would not occur but the
Universe would be like Jell-O or pudding, all one consistency.
Subatomic particles retain their identity even within a Black Hole,
and waste no time returning to their familiar dance of interaction
with other particles, based on their nature, when freed from the
constraints of the Black Hole. Thus, during the rush of matter
leaving an exploding Black Hole, there are parts TO THE SIDE
as well as before and behind any given matter or clump of matter,
and this is the incipient basis of the turnabout. An endless
stretch into infinity, that silly argument, assumes ONLY the
influence behind any given escaping matter, which is simply
never the case.
Second, incipient Black Holes are formed immediately after a
Big Bang, and why would they not? Black Holes are driven by
gravity, a gravitational giant that assumed a density so intense
that the flow of gravity particles attracted to it overwhelms the
outbursts of particles squeezing out from the center, tipping the
equilibrium such that an ever-increasing density of the
gravitational giant occurs. Gradually, it builds in strength and
size, and pulls FROM THE SIDE that matter moving outward
from the Big Bang. So the motion changes from expansion to a
slowing curve, and eventually to a compression of matter into
the nearest Black Hole, and thence of Black Holes into each
other, until the stage is set for another Big Bang.
ZetaTalk